Hunting Washington Forum
Community => Photo & Video => Topic started by: Baggman on May 26, 2011, 04:22:35 PM
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Ok can someone explain what this cob is that everyone is feeding the deer. Can you buy it and if so is it available in or around Monroe. These blacktail don't seem to like the cracked corn as much as the yotes do.... Thanks
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Cob is Corn, Oats,and Barley. Wet cob is the same three things plus molasses . Should be able to get it at any feed store.
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yep yep
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Dels in monroe will have both varieties deer have sweet tooths too so I'd go wet cob....
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i got some good pics last year of a little black bear year with a block of pressed cob. The bear sat down, picked up the block and ate the whole thing like it was a candy bar.
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speaking of Dels, the ones down by me have a version called a deer block that has apple and berry added to it.
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We get ours at a Big R, don't know if you have one there. Here it's called sweet cob. We have been using it for 3 years now and the deer love it. That is of course if you can keep the bears out of it.
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i got some good pics last year of a little black bear year with a block of pressed cob. The bear sat down, picked up the block and ate the whole thing like it was a candy bar.
I can totally see that happening :chuckle: :chuckle:
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that bear came back 2 days later and chewed on the camera too. Kind of weird that it wasnt destroyed just chewed on it like a teething puppy. Only real damage was a busted latch and gouges in the lens cover
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Thanks guys. I plan on making a self feederout of 6"conduit. I will check with dells on the cob. Shouldn't be to expensive. If the bear are trying to eat your cams its cause they smell like this cob stuff. I like to spray down my cam with decent spray just like I do to my hunting clothes. Just cover the lens before spraying. I've never had a problem. Thanks for the cob info....
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trust me i always spray down when checkin cams, even use gloves to handle my cam. I really think the flash on the cheap ones attracts the bears to come play with them.
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I only dump cob when I know it will be dry for a few days..not much of an attractant when wet
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OK, so I may be asking a dumb question here. I'm an east coast hunter transplanted here by the Navy, and elk dumb. Will this wet cob work for elk on the east side?
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Should be about 12 or 13 bucks a bag at Dells. 50 lb bags.
I would actually suggest not going with the sweet cob. The bears will smell it from 20 miles away and home in. The non sweet may attract less bears.
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OH.....and when the bears do find your sweet cob..............this is all that will be left..........
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And yes....I do keep pictures of poo handy.
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The elk around my place are attracted to the cob and a few elk eat it, but the deer can't get enough of it. Took the deer a while to warm up to it though. They wouldn't touch it, only smelled it for a couple months, but now I can't keep my feeder full. Funny how much they slobber while eating it.
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I've tried the wet cob for blacktail around my place and had it covered to keep dry, I never had anyluck with blacktails hitting it. I had the trail cam on it for 2 months and nothing. This was in the winter last year, did get plenty of pics of elk and yotes though.
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I've had plenty of blacktail eat on it. Throw some cob and apples and let 'em chow down.
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trying to get one that shows the cob better....
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So you just by a bag or 2 from time to time then go put it out in the woods, and come what ever season you hunt go sit on this until something you are willing to shoot comes along?
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Yep. It would help if you can pour it out at the base of a tree....something to keep it as dry as possible. You can also make a pvc feeder or buy something. A week before you want to hunt wet it down. It will ferment and then you can kill drunk deer.
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I take it all you guys are Bow Hunters.... Not sure I would want to put out bait as a rifle hunter... then let the archery and muzzy guys find my spot, shoot my deer, and leave me wondering what happened...... :dunno: :dunno:
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Nice H2 now find me some horn .... ;) :chuckle: :tup: :tup:
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This was the one and only glimpse I got of horn coming into my cob......
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i have used it for blacktails and they love it. i bought the deer apple block thing from dels but the deer really did not pay much attention to it when i had the cob out.
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i got some good pics last year of a little black bear year with a block of pressed cob. The bear sat down, picked up the block and ate the whole thing like it was a candy bar.
I can totally see that happening :chuckle: :chuckle:
it probly just got done eating the trail camera and was eating the block for desert!
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COB is pricey and not very helpful for the critters. Find a local farmer, buy peas, triticale, barley, lentils, garbs and canola or camelina meal add some vitamin/mineral mix (this gets the calcium and selinium up where it belongs), save some money and do a better job for the animals using your handout.
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Feed em what they are looking for naturally, and extra, and be growing bigger bucks. White tail institute sells the best attractants and mineral packs i have ever used, depending on what season and what the deer need for maximum growth...
Check it out! :tup:
https://www.whitetailinstitute.com/ (https://www.whitetailinstitute.com/)
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Ok can someone explain what this cob is that everyone is feeding the deer. Can you buy it and if so is it available in or around Monroe. These blacktail don't seem to like the cracked corn as much as the yotes do.... Thanks
Just ask for Sweet Feed. A block I have great luck with is country acres deef block. Made by Country Acres Feed, Brentwood MO. Some of the other blocks I have put out don't get touched. They devour these blocks. They slow down during the summer months when the feed is good. Post rut and post hunting season a block will only last me for 2-3 days. They seem to do them some good too.
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Is there any secret to using wet cob for late archery blacktail (like keeping it dry)? Is there anything other than apples that it works well with for these blackies? :dunno:
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Cob will mold like crazy if it gets wet. There are still lots of apples hitting the ground right now :twocents:
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Is there any secret to using wet cob for late archery blacktail (like keeping it dry)? Is there anything other than apples that it works well with for these blackies? :dunno:
Whole corn with molasses stirred in. None of them can resist it.